4 Chinese Convenience Store Ice Creams You Should Try

Ever stopped at a convenience store to take a peek inside the freezer and wondered what the green popsicle was? Although cones and pineapple-shaped goodies may be comfortingly familiar, here are a few lesser-known treats that are no less deserving of your love.

1. Mung Bean Everything

The cousins of red beans are often tragically misunderstood. ‘Lv’ is ‘green,’ and ‘dou’ is bean, so lvdou must mean ‘green beans,’ right?

2. ‘Milk Stick’ Ice Cream

Among convenience store desserts, this is as basic as you can get: a modest cylinder of white ice cream served on a stick.

It’s supposed to be milk-flavored, but it’s more like the faint memory of what milk tastes like after you water it down and add sugar. But it’s cold and cheap and served in moderate portions, so there’s that.

3. Red Date Milk-Flavored Ice Cream

For an ice cream that has dates inside, this option is surprisingly accessible to a Western palate. A thin outer shell of white chocolate covers ice cream with a swirl of red date filling.

The date, although pretty artificial, is satisfyingly sweet. So is the rest of the treat. This is a solid option to indulge yourself, Chinese-style.

4. Chestnut Red Bean Ice Cream

Unless you’re really fresh off the boat, chances are you’ve tasted at least one dessert with red beans in it. The sweets, especially ones filled with bean paste, can be sickly sweet at times, which is why we prefer this rendition: bits of sweet chestnut and whole red beans embedded in yet another milk-flavored popsicle.

The ice cream quality isn’t amazing, but it’s pretty good for something that came out of a convenience store freezer.

Feel like treating yourself? Click here for our guide to actual ice cream stores in Shenzhen and here for Guangzhou.